LeafByNiggle
Well-known member
How true it is!Leaf,
Look, I understand what a “sink” is. I own my own–a 250 year old house that simply absorbs money and sends it into the ether. I’ve come to understand, through my 70 years, that you don’t own anything–no matter what you’ve paid for it—it owns you.
Unusual, no. But usual for 1978-2013. Do we need to see a falling off a cliff graph to get the point?Well, in the first place, the Arctic ice pack is not melting at an unusual rate.
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It is all a question of scale. Yes, it is true that over the eons the climate of earth has undergone much greater extremes than we have seen so far. But the AGW issue is not about what will happen eons from now. It is about what will happen in less than 200 years from now.So, the real question, I think, becomes not, "what is actually causing the climate change? it’s an recurring event that will eventually happen whatever I do to try to change it.
Yes, this is one of the remarkable stories of how international cooperation succeeded in averting a disaster. It does not help your point. You will have much better luck arguing against AGW directly rather than by saying how it is like the CFC/Ozone issue.Now, let’s get back to AGW. Do you remember the hole in the ozone layer? It was back in the 60s or 70s.
Furthermore, every single one of these academic alarmists have funding for their projects on the line.
That is perhaps your weakest argument. Scientists have just as much to gain financially by disproving AGW as they have by proving it. Think of the fame! To be the first one who definitively proved man had negligible effect on climate! The people who want this to be the outcome have a lot more money than the people who want AGW to be true. If a scientist breaks ranks with the “fraud” of AGW, he will be warmly welcomed with even greater rewards by the oil industry.You can’t trust them as far as you can throw them!